Tag: achievement

  • Video: UP BJP MLA boasts of Atiq killing as achievement

    Video: UP BJP MLA boasts of Atiq killing as achievement

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    Saharanpur: Saharanpur BJP MLA Rajiv Gumber has termed the killing of gangster Atiq Ahmad and his brother Ashraf as a “big achievement of the Yogi Adityanath government”.

    In a purported video that has gone viral, Gumber can be heard saying, “Upar bhej diya na humne… Haven’t we sent Atiq Ahmed up? Now it is the turn of Saharanpur-based goons, so vote for our candidate.”

    The video was purportedly shot during an event to inaugurate the party’s mayoral candidate Ajay Kumar’s election office in Saharanpur.

    MS Education Academy

    Gumber’s controversial remarks have been widely circulated on social media platforms, with many accusing him of “glorifying” extra-judicial killings.

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    #Video #BJP #MLA #boasts #Atiq #killing #achievement

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • JK Administration Appoints 10k Lumberdars And Chowkidars, CS Applauds Achievement

    JK Administration Appoints 10k Lumberdars And Chowkidars, CS Applauds Achievement

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    SRINAGAR: The Jammu and Kashmir Administration has nearly completed the appointment of 10,000 educated and young individuals from different villages across the Union Territory as Lumbedars and Village Guards (Chowkidars). This reformative measure, which began a few months ago, aims to strengthen the grassroots level of governance in the region.

    The information was revealed during a meeting chaired by Chief Secretary, Dr Arun Kumar Mehta, and attended by various officials including the DG, CID; Commissioner Secretary GAD; Commissioner Secretary IT & Information; Divisional Commissioners; Secretary PD&MD; Secretary, Revenue, and all Deputy Commissioners of the UT, either physically or virtually.

    Dr Mehta commended both the Divisional and District Administration for achieving this feat in record time. He emphasized the need to provide training to these young individuals to sensitize them about their important role as frontline workers who must work for the welfare and well-being of their villages.

    He urged authorities to ensure that these workers are given due respect and recognition as they will act as a bridge between the common masses and higher authorities. He advised the creation of a WhatsApp group for these workers to enable continuous communication between them and the District and Divisional Administration.

    Dr Mehta noted that as these workers are educated and have a good reputation in their villages, their services will be authentic, genuine, and seamless with respect to ground level verification about the implementation of different welfare programs. He emphasized their role in reporting malpractices such as encroachment of state land and other incidents of laxity or unprofessional conduct on the part of government officials in their respective villages. Their reporting will be vital in taking action against the delinquents.

    The Chief Secretary highlighted that these workers’ role during accidents and disasters in their areas would provide the Administration with instant information for early intervention and rescue operations. He also noted that they would act as a link between people and the administration to raise genuine grievances before the authorities for timely redressal.

    The meeting revealed that there are 7,056 sanctioned posts of Lumbedars and 2,718 posts of Chowkidars in the UT. Out of these, 2,220 previously appointed Lumbedars and 1,165 Chowkidars were found eligible to continue working after verifying their character and antecedents. The process was initiated to replace the 4,832 Lumbedars and 1,553 Chowkidars who were found worth replacing as per the rules in vogue. All candidates, including the old continuing ones, were selected based on merit and their character and antecedents were verified by concerned authorities.

    The meeting also discussed revamping the role and responsibilities of these workers as per the requirements of modern times. This will bring a change in the administration, transforming it towards a more responsive, responsible, transparent, and accountable entity in discharging its day-to-day affairs.(KNO)

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    #Administration #Appoints #10k #Lumberdars #Chowkidars #Applauds #Achievement

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Sushma Seth wins META Lifetime Achievement Award 2023

    Sushma Seth wins META Lifetime Achievement Award 2023

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    New Delhi: Stage, film and television actor Sushma Seth will be conferred with the Mahindra Excellence in Theatre Awards (META) 2023 Lifetime Achievement Award. She will be felicitated during the award ceremony on March 29 at Kamani Auditorium in the national capital.

    Teamwork Arts and Mahindra Group have also announced the jury members — theatre director Amal Allana; theatre and film actress Arundhati Nag; award-winning theatre director Bruce Guthrie; theatre director Neelam Mansingh Chowdhry; Sangeet Natak Akademi Award recipient actor Mohan Agashe; award-winning theatre artist and actor Shernaz Patel; and Director of India Habitat Centre and President of the Delhi Music Society Sunit Tandon.

    The announcements come ahead of the week-long META and Festival to be held from March 23 to 28 in the Capital, during which ten-shortlisted plays will be performed.

    Over 400 entries representing languages like Assamese, English, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Marwari, and Tamil were received.

    This year’s Lifetime Awardee, Sushma Seth started her career in the 1950s, and was a founder member of the Delhi-based theatre group Yatrik. Her first movie was ‘Junoon’ (1978) and is known for her role as ‘dadi’ in the TV soap ‘Hum Log’ that aired in the 1980s.

    Jay Shah, Head, Cultural Outreach, Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd, said, “We are thrilled to confer the META 2023 Lifetime Achievement Award on Sushma Seth, a veteran of the stage who understands the complexity and nuances of theatre and has in fact lived the craft fully through her vast body of work.”

    Sanjoy K. Roy, Managing Director, Teamwork Arts & Festival Producer, added, “META 2023 will present awards in 14 categories including the Lifetime Achievement Award. The 13 competitive categories are for Best Play, Best Director, Best Stage Design, Best Light Design, Best Innovative Sound Design, Best Costume Design, Best Actor in a Lead Role (Male), Best Actor in a Lead Role (Female), Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Male), Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Female), Best Original Script, Best Ensemble and Best Choreographer.”

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    #Sushma #Seth #wins #META #Lifetime #Achievement #Award

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • What climate law? Voters clueless about Biden’s top achievement

    What climate law? Voters clueless about Biden’s top achievement

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    The sales pitch for Biden’s signature legislation would be crucial to any reelection effort he wages in 2024. But polls show that few Americans are aware of the climate law and how it could benefit them — creating a political challenge that the president’s Democratic allies acknowledge.

    “If we can’t figure out how to sell that story over the next two years, we should find a different job,” Senate Environment and Public Works Chair Tom Carper (D-Del.), whose committee wrote a sizable chunk of the law, said in an interview. “And I don’t have any plans to find a different job.”

    It won’t be an easy task.

    A third of registered voters have heard “nothing at all” about the climate law, while another 24 percent heard “a little” and 29 percent heard “some,” according to a Yale Project on Climate Change Communication poll conducted in December. A Washington Post-ABC News poll released Monday found that 62 percent of Americans thought Biden had accomplished “not very much” or “little or nothing.”

    “I really feel sympathy with the president,” Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) told POLITICO. “You do really important things that might have an impact and there’s a day or two of news coverage. If important political points are not getting out to the public, it’s not just the politicians’ fault.”

    Republicans are offering no condolences — including lawmakers whose districts are poised to host many of the jobs the legislation would create. They contend that the law, H.R. 5376 (117th), has stoked inflation that is burdening households with high gasoline, food and home-heating prices.

    “It has made the lives of American people, American families more difficult and it doesn’t matter how much spin the president puts on it — it’s been two years of failure,” said House Agriculture Chair G.T. Thompson of Pennsylvania, who like every other congressional Republican opposed the measure.

    The Biden administration is employing two approaches to sell the law’s benefits to a largely unaware public — an effort that will take officials on the road and into people’s homes.

    Biden, a self-professed “car guy,” has promoted the law and its tax credits for electric vehicles at public events such as the North American International Auto Show in Detroit and in appearances on Jay Leno’s Garage. On Wednesday, Biden spoke at a Laborers’ International Union of North America training center in Deforest, Wis., about new manufacturing jobs.

    Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen visited Ultium Cells in Spring Hill, Tenn., on Wednesday to champion new domestic battery manufacturing sparked by the climate law. EPA Administrator Michael Regan headed to Wabaunsee, Kan., that same day to talk electric school buses. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm is on a three-state swing through Friday across Utah, Nevada and Massachusetts.

    Granholm also made Thursday’s announcement of the $2 billion battery-materials loan, which will come from a 2007 DOE program that got additional funding and authority from Biden’s climate law. The company, Redwood Materials, said the loan would fund projects creating jobs in Nevada and Kansas.

    “We have a lot of work to do and not a lot of time to do it,” said Casey Katims, executive director of the U.S. Climate Alliance, a coalition of 24 U.S. governors working to help the administration slash U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in half from 2005 levels by the end of the decade.

    The focus on the middle of the country is intentional. The Biden administration championed the climate law as a jobs boon for blue-collar workers that will ease consumers’ financial burden during the country’s transition to clean energy.

    “We’ve already created 800,000 manufacturing jobs even without this law. With this new law, we will create hundreds of thousands of new jobs across the country,” Biden said in the State of the Union speech, noting Intel’s plans to build a semiconductor factory outside Columbus, Ohio. That project will bring jobs that pay workers $130,000 a year, including for many positions that don’t require a college degree, he noted.

    Since Biden signed the law in August, 100,000 new job postings sprouted across 31 states and 94 clean energy projects have drawn $89.5 billion in new investment, according to an analysis by Climate Power, a coalition of environmental groups. Biden administration officials and Democrats widely promoted the study, which was released Monday.

    Many of those jobs are in districts represented by GOP lawmakers who opposed the legislation.

    Among other political headwinds, though, Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) said many Americans are simply exhausted from years of crises such as the coronavirus pandemic, the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, two impeachments of former President Donald Trump and protests about police brutality and racial justice.

    “To the extent that the mood improves — and I think it is and it will continue to — I think that overwhelmingly benefits the party that has the White House,” Kaine said in an interview.

    Meanwhile, Biden and his team are working to inform people about the economic gains the climate law promises. They’ve also added a consumer outreach official who is tasked with making it easier for the average American to take advantage of the law’s rebates, tax credits and other incentives.

    Many of the law’s tax benefits, such as rebates for home improvements and appliance upgrades, won’t be felt until a year from now when Americans file their 2023 returns. Lawmakers, regulators and U.S. allies are still fighting over which electric vehicles should qualify for a $7,500 credit.

    Joshua Peck, senior policy adviser on the White House implementation team for the climate law, said it’s not essential for Americans to know the legislation’s name — but they “need to see and feel benefits, and know that they are part of the president’s agenda.”

    “Over the next year or two, so many of those accomplishments will be happening on top of each other,” Peck said.

    Don’t expect splashy public service announcements or advertising. Peck and his team are working behind the scenes organizing businesses, trade associations, equipment manufacturers and state energy offices to bring awareness to the opportunities the law affords.

    The idea is to spread the word that more energy efficient, cleaner options are available, which begins with educating people like heating and cooling contractors, tradespeople and electric utilities about ways they can inform customers of savings.

    The White House’s environmental allies are also looking to help.

    “It was just signed into law a matter of months ago. It’s a big, complex law,” said Tiernan Sittenfeld, senior vice president of government affairs with the League of Conservation Voters. “It’s incumbent on all of us to make clear to people all across the country the ways that — not the ins and outs or getting into the weeds of the legislation — but how does it benefit them? How does it save them money on their monthly energy bills? What are the rebates for making their home more efficient or electrifying the homes?”

    Of course, that message runs up against Republican warnings that Biden is out to abolish traditional touchstones of Americans’ lives — including gas stoves along with older, inefficient, toilets, dishwashers, showerheads and incandescent light bulbs.

    Rewiring America, a nonprofit whose work has been influential within the White House Climate Policy Office, has partnered with Redfin and Airbnb to get the message out to 10 million Americans about the benefits of converting appliances and homes to run off electric power rather than gas — tasks the climate law will make more affordable.

    People already are curious: 400,000 people have used a tool on the website of Rewiring America run by a green advocacy group that calculates potential savings from the law. Those visitors all came to the tool by word of mouth and news articles, said Ari Matusiak, CEO of Rewiring America.

    “If the policy is effective it is going to be embedded in the transactions that people are making and these electric machines are increasingly going to become the default,” Matusiak said. “That’s the actual goal — that it becomes the kind of no-brainer decision.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )